Key financial affiliates of South Korea’s No. 1 conglomerate Samsung Group have eliminated hundreds of jobs via voluntary retirement programs as part of efforts to cut costs amid a prolonged economic slowdown, industry sources said Friday.
Samsung Fire & Marine Insurance Co., the country’s top non-life insurer, has recently implemented a voluntary retirement program and dismissed around 150 workers. Samsung Fire has enforced the program annually since 2009, according to the sources.
The move comes as the lack of viable high-yield investment options amid volatile market conditions have weighed down on the firm’s asset management returns.
Samsung Card Co., the country’s No. 2 industry player, recently cut some 100 workers to tide over the economic slump, which has dented local credit card firms’ earnings, the sources said.
The average commission rate for merchants with annual sales of less than 200 million won ($186,200) was lowered to 1.5 percent from the previous 1.8 percent in September, according to the Credit Finance Association.
The reduction in commission rates came as credit card firms were under sharp criticism for charging far higher fees to smaller merchants than large retailers, thus pocketing excessive income. (Yonhap News)
Samsung Fire & Marine Insurance Co., the country’s top non-life insurer, has recently implemented a voluntary retirement program and dismissed around 150 workers. Samsung Fire has enforced the program annually since 2009, according to the sources.
The move comes as the lack of viable high-yield investment options amid volatile market conditions have weighed down on the firm’s asset management returns.
Samsung Card Co., the country’s No. 2 industry player, recently cut some 100 workers to tide over the economic slump, which has dented local credit card firms’ earnings, the sources said.
The average commission rate for merchants with annual sales of less than 200 million won ($186,200) was lowered to 1.5 percent from the previous 1.8 percent in September, according to the Credit Finance Association.
The reduction in commission rates came as credit card firms were under sharp criticism for charging far higher fees to smaller merchants than large retailers, thus pocketing excessive income. (Yonhap News)
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Articles by Korea Herald